The Memoirs of Underrepresented Groups
For class today, we had to read "The White House" by Claude McKay, which details the speaker's rage at the treatment of Black people in the United States. McKay leads the reader through the battle the speaker endures to contain themselves and emotionally rise above the racism they face on a daily basis. This piece connects well to A Raisin in the Sun , by Lorraine Hansberry, which we read and analyzed earlier in the semester. In that play, Walter Lee Younger is shown as desperate, seeking a way to elevate his status both financially and socially. He longs to follow his dreams, but is constricted by the society in which he lives: America. He may have once been composed; in fact, his mother claims he was, but his economic status has driven him to anger by the play's onset, resulting in a tirade of negative emotions. He is resentful and pained, obviously past the point of controlled calm that is depicted in "The White House." The Younger family in A Raisin ...